News

Georgetown University Law professor Stephen Vladeck explains where things stand with the 9/11 Guantanamo cases now that the plea deals have been canceled.
Haley Cohen Gilliland talks about her book, "A Flower Traveled In My Blood," about the work of the Abuelas of the Plaza de Mayo and how Argentina's stolen children have grappled with finding their ...
NPR journalists Scott Detrow, Sacha Pfeiffer and Linda Holmes discuss Hollywood's treatment of journalism movies and how they reflect public perception of the profession.
It's been more than a decade that several cities got federal funding for downtown streetcars. Some have flourished, others are faltering and at least one is fading out.
A new report from the group Common Sense Media shows teens are experimenting with AI "companions" designed to provide deep ...
Soaring prices, lagging incomes and burdensome social security payments are the top issues for frustrated, cash-strapped ...
The government of the tiny African kingdom of Lesotho has declared a two-year state of disaster, as its once-thriving garment ...
NPR's Adrian Ma plays the puzzle with North Country Public Radio listener Sarah Baldwin and Weekend Edition Puzzlemaster Will ...
Officials in a Texas hill country community pummeled by deadly flooding July 4 said Saturday that just three people remain ...
Congress voted to claw back federal funding to public media. Some of those hit hardest include community radio stations in ...
Palestinians were shot dead during a food distribution on Saturday at a center run by a U.S.- and Israeli-backed group in ...
Sleepover camps are seen as an American tradition. But the deaths of so many children at Camp Mystic during the Texas floods have led some parents to question the safety of the camps.